AI wrote this article for me. I begged for it not to make stuff up. Unfortunately, it kind of did still. Granted, I thought some of the post was interesting never the less.
Faith on the Fringes: The God of the Nets
In the high halls of human cities, religion is often a matter of state and structure. But as you move toward the coast, past the featureless stretches of the desert, the polished rituals of the urban centers give way to something grittier. Here, among the humble huts and red snapper scales, the fishermen turn to a figure rarely mentioned in polite society: Ukanh.
A Taboo of Trade
While Ukanh is the god of commerce and merchants, you won’t find many shrines to him in the larger human cities. In those places, his worship is largely frowned upon—perhaps seen as too transactional or tied to the greed of the marketplace. But for a crew on a small vessel facing a day of empty nets and "sour air," social taboos matter far less than survival.
The Desperation of the Haul
For these people, Ukanh isn't a figure of high theology; he is a source of immediate relief. When destitution looms, the fishermen don't look for a temple. They stand on their decks with arms outstretched to the sky. It is a raw, vocal plea for the god to provide for his humble followers.
When the nets finally come up heavy—sometimes so full of fish that the deck becomes nearly impossible to walk on—the cries of "Praise Ukanh" aren't just tradition; they are a genuine reaction to a perceived miracle of survival.
Outsider Perspectives
This public displays of faith can be jarring to outsiders. To a Drow, the idea that a god would intervene in something as mundane as a fishing haul feels like pure superstition. In their view, bread and fish are won through labor, not prayer. Yet, in the small, unnamed ports south of Sand Ridge, the physical reality of an overflowing hold of red snapper is the only argument the fishermen need to keep their forbidden faith alive.
Citations
On the social standing of the faith: "Understanding religion was an important part of blending into a society, but worship of Ukanh was not very common, at least publicly and in the large human cities." — Vera Manuscript.
On the nature of the prayer: “Ukanh bless us,” a fisherman cried. “Save from destitution and provide your humble followers relief.” — Vera Manuscript.
On the results: “The number of fish soon became overwhelming. Vera wondered how anyone could walk on the deck.” — Vera Manuscript.
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